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NAME

       eventlogadm - push records into the Samba event log store

SYNOPSIS

       eventlogadm [-d] [-h] -o addsource EVENTLOG SOURCENAME MSGFILE

       eventlogadm [-d] [-h] -o write EVENTLOG

       eventlogadm [-d] [-h] -o dump EVENTLOG RECORD_NUMBER

DESCRIPTION

       This tool is part of the samba(1) suite.

       eventlogadm is a filter that accepts formatted event log records on
       standard input and writes them to the Samba event log store. Windows
       client can then manipulate these record using the usual administration
       tools.

OPTIONS

       -d
           The -d option causes eventlogadm to emit debugging information.

       -o addsource EVENTLOG SOURCENAME MSGFILE
           The -o addsource option creates a new event log source.

       -o write EVENTLOG
           The -o write reads event log records from standard input and writes
           them to the Samba event log store named by EVENTLOG.

       -o dump EVENTLOG RECORD_NUMBER
           The -o dump reads event log records from a EVENTLOG tdb and dumps
           them to standard output on screen.

       -h
           Print usage information.

EVENTLOG RECORD FORMAT

       For the write operation, eventlogadm expects to be able to read
       structured records from standard input. These records are a sequence of
       lines, with the record key and data separated by a colon character.
       Records are separated by at least one or more blank line.

       The event log record field are:

       o    LEN - This field should be 0, since eventlogadm will calculate
           this value.

       o    RS1 - This must be the value 1699505740.

       o    RCN - This field should be 0.

       o    TMG - The time the eventlog record was generated; format is the
           number of seconds since 00:00:00 January 1, 1970, UTC.

       o    TMW - The time the eventlog record was written; format is the
           number of seconds since 00:00:00 January 1, 1970, UTC.

       o    EID - The eventlog ID.

       o    ETP - The event type -- one of "INFO", "ERROR", "WARNING", "AUDIT
           SUCCESS" or "AUDIT FAILURE".

       o    ECT - The event category; this depends on the message file. It is
           primarily used as a means of filtering in the eventlog viewer.

       o    RS2 - This field should be 0.

       o    CRN - This field should be 0.

       o    USL - This field should be 0.

       o    SRC - This field contains the source name associated with the
           event log. If a message file is used with an event log, there will
           be a registry entry for associating this source name with a message
           file DLL.

       o    SRN - The name of the machine on which the eventlog was generated.
           This is typically the host name.

       o    STR - The text associated with the eventlog. There may be more
           than one string in a record.

       o    DAT - This field should be left unset.

EXAMPLES

       An example of the record format accepted by eventlogadm:

                LEN: 0
                RS1: 1699505740
                RCN: 0
                TMG: 1128631322
                TMW: 1128631322
                EID: 1000
                ETP: INFO
                ECT: 0
                RS2: 0
                CRN: 0
                USL: 0
                SRC: cron
                SRN: dmlinux
                STR: (root) CMD ( rm -f /var/spool/cron/lastrun/cron.hourly)
                DAT:

       Set up an eventlog source, specifying a message file DLL:

                eventlogadm -o addsource Application MyApplication | \\
                     %SystemRoot%/system32/MyApplication.dll

       Filter messages from the system log into an event log:

                tail -f /var/log/messages | \\
                     my_program_to_parse_into_eventlog_records | \\
                          eventlogadm SystemLogEvents

VERSION

       This man page is correct for version 3.0.25 of the Samba suite.

AUTHOR

       The original Samba software and related utilities were created by
       Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open
       Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed.